ICT and Development in developing countries

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COOPI - Cooperazione Internazionale http://www.coopi.org 1/29 ICT and Development in developing countries Paolo Palmerini European Social Forum (London, Oct. 15 th -18 th, 2004) email: paolo@palmerini.org

About Cooperazione Internazionale Cooperazione Internazionale (COOPI) is an Italian NGO 2/29 Created in 1965 Now active in almost 40 countries in the world Latin America, Africa, East Europe and Asia About 200 projects running Development programs Emergency initiatives Sensitization Campaigns Main donors: European Union, Italian Government, private donations, International Organizations, other Governments

Outline What divide? ICT and development, some examples Using ICT Adapting ICT Creating ICT Moving on Conclusions 3/29

Is it really a small planet? Despite the view of an homogeneous and globalized world, countries still experience important differences; 4/29

Is it really a small planet? Despite the view of an homogeneous and globalized world, countries still experience important differences; One of it is about access to information, through a set of tools called Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) 4/29

Is it really a small planet? Despite the view of an homogeneous and globalized world, countries still experience important differences; One of it is about access to information, through a set of tools called Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) This has been called the digital-divide; 4/29

Is it really a small planet? Despite the view of an homogeneous and globalized world, countries still experience important differences; One of it is about access to information, through a set of tools called Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) This has been called the digital-divide; The focus is on access to information, not to technology; 4/29

About the divide The digital-divide exists, as showed in many reports: [1] UNDP Human Development Report 2001, Making New Technologies Work for Human Development, UNDP (2001); [2] P. Biggs, ICT development indices, UNCTAD (2003); [3] Bridges.org Spanning the Digital Divide. Understanding and Tackling the Issues, Bridges.org (2001); Is the digital-divide growing? 5/29

About the divide The digital-divide exists, as showed in many reports: [1] UNDP Human Development Report 2001, Making New Technologies Work for Human Development, UNDP (2001); [2] P. Biggs, ICT development indices, UNCTAD (2003); [3] Bridges.org Spanning the Digital Divide. Understanding and Tackling the Issues, Bridges.org (2001); Is the digital-divide growing? Probably yes. 5/29

Location of Centers for Innovation ICTs are today being developed in the North of the Planet 6/29 From UNDP HDR 2001 [1]

Technology and development Using ICT for development Technology is used as-is to reach development goals Adapting ICT for development Technology is adapted to local and specific needs Developing ICT for development New solutions are devised 7/29

Using existing ICTs Telecentres (TLC) Community access point to ICTs ICT in education Schoolnet - ICT for education in Africa Anywherebooks - on-demand book printing Economics Manobi - information system for fishermen Peoplik - virtual marketplace for artisans 8/29

Adapting existing ICTs Geographical Information Systems MiGIS - GIS with Indigenous Knowledge GramChitra - Participatory GIS Telehealth Tsilitwa - telehealth in South African villages ALERTA - a phone based monitoring system Localization Tajik Linux - Tranlsation of Mandrake Linux 9/29

Developing new ICTs Daknet An ad-hoc network implemented on bus and motos Simputer A palmtop-like, affordable, oversimplified PC Jahi Computing and network devices for extreme environments 10/29

Telecenters Community centers with ICT services 11/29 Many flavors: Telecenters (TLC), Community Community Technology Centers (CTC), Telecottages (and more?) Widely diffused in the world (mostly Latin America and Africa) Based on a common model located in underserved and marginalized areas (urban and rural) 10-20 PC connected to the internet (when possible) Several services but also support to the local community activities (e.g. trainings) managed by local NGOs and associations TLCs should be self-sustainable, after the first effort for creation

Telecenters Initiatives for the diffusion of Telecenters E-Cidadania 1 of the Prefectura de S. Paulo, Brasil Based on Free Software About 100 TLCs running in 2003 Somos@Telecentros 2 A Latin American network of 350 TLCs Promotes TLCs the region through research, meetings, etc. WSIS 3 Civil Society working group CTCnet 4 Community Technology Centers Network in the US 1 http://telecentros.sp.gov.br 2 http://tele-centros.org 3 http://mailman-new.greennet.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/telecentres 4 http://ctcnet.org 12/29

Schoolnet Africa http://www.schoolnetafrica.net 13/29 African NGO to improve access to education through ICT Present in 30 African Countries Some programs One million computers to African schools From guns to computers (multimedia computer access to child ex-combatants in Angola, Liberia and Rwanda) Africa teachers network

AnywhereBooks http://www.anywherebooks.org Californian NGO + National Library of Uganda Virtual Mobile Library Print on-demand Digitalization and diffusion of books from NLU 30,000 books printed in 300 sites Creation of 300 mini public libraries Each book costs 1$ (paper and ink) + 11$ (car and printer) 14/29

Manobi http://www.manobi.net 15/29 Manobi is a Telco Company from Senegal Information Service for fishermen in Senegal Built on a GSM+GPS infrastructure (SMS + WAP) Fishermen can have real time informations on fleet management on weather conditions on prices After the first year 57 users (41 buyers and 16 fishermen)

Peoplink http://www.peoplink.org 16/29 Peoplink is an NGO that helps artisans from developing countries to sell their products through Internet Artisans manage locally their catalog using the CatGen software Peoplink provides CatGen + IT support a web portal, as a virtual marketplace logistics services Active in Mali, Nepal, India, Bangladesh, Haiti

Geographic Information Systems http://www.gisdevelopment.net 17/29 GramChitra (MIT Media Lab (US) and Centre for Spatial Database Management Solutions (India).) Map villages in Faridabad region (India) Provide a methodology for planning development of GramChitra, an ad-hoc collaborative platform (PDA + GPS). MI-GIS (Village in Yunnan region - China) Mobile Interactive GIS Insert Indigenous Knowledge into a GIS Using Participatory Rural Appraisal exercises

Tsilitwa The problem Tsilitwa its a village in South Africa. The nearest hospital is 20 Km far Villagers often walk to the hospital due to transport costs There is a clinic in the village but no doctors In the village there is no electricity nor telephone line The solution A wireless connection was established between the the hospital and the village. Nurses from the clinic can talk with the doctor in the hospital in videoconference Villagers can be assisted faster and cheaper 18/29

ALERTA A software system to monitor the spread of diseases in Peru, created by the company VOXIVA The task was previously performed with fax and snail mail. Its completion time was not less than one month Tested on 76 health centers over a region with 20000 inhabitants Completion time is reduced to a few days. 19/29

Daknet http://www.firstmilesolutions.com A wireless store-and-forward network between remote villages in rural areas Developed at MIT Media Lab, deployed in India and Cambodia Based on the existing transport infrastructure Messages (text/audio/video) are physically transported from one village to another, by bus or motorcycle Used to send messages and to access public administration services Connected villages up to 400Km About 500$ per village 20/29

Daknet Messages are left at access points, located near the bus stop the bus mounts a laptop equipped with a wireless card when the bus stops by the access point, the laptop senses its presence and automatically download new messages and upload those to be delivered for every village the same operations are repeated automatically 21/29

Simputer http://www.simputer.org Simple, In-expensive, Multi-lingual People s computer A PDA based PC, radical simplicity for the masses GNU/Linux based Operating System New protocols have been developed to have a complete audio and video based interaction with the Simputer (for illiterate people) Launched in???, with a price of 300$ (still about the double of a refurbished computer) 22/29

Jahi Fundation Starting from the needs of farmers in Ban Phon Kam, Laos, the Foundation developed the Jahi PC and Communication System to help them in communications, education, economic development and health-care The Jhai PC is a solid-state, low-wattage computer that can be powered by a foot-crank The communication system is based on a high-bandwidth wireless network, and support for village small businesses Jhai Foundation is developing a rugged computer and printer assembled from off-the-shelf components that draws less than 20 watts in normal use - less than 70 watts when the printer is printing - and that can survive dirt, heat, and immersion in water. 23/29

Lessons Learned ICT are a powerful tool to address development goals 24/29

Lessons Learned ICT are a powerful tool to address development goals even if we are aware of the fact that an internet connection will not necessarily give enough food, healthy water and a good education to everyone on earth 24/29

Lessons Learned ICT are a powerful tool to address development goals even if we are aware of the fact that an internet connection will not necessarily give enough food, healthy water and a good education to everyone on earth 24/29 Very few solutions are developed in the South

Lessons Learned ICT are a powerful tool to address development goals even if we are aware of the fact that an internet connection will not necessarily give enough food, healthy water and a good education to everyone on earth 24/29 Very few solutions are developed in the South not that we would like to reinvent the wheel every time...

Lessons Learned ICT are a powerful tool to address development goals even if we are aware of the fact that an internet connection will not necessarily give enough food, healthy water and a good education to everyone on earth 24/29 Very few solutions are developed in the South not that we would like to reinvent the wheel every time... There is need for a wider participation to the development of ICT

Lessons Learned ICT are a powerful tool to address development goals even if we are aware of the fact that an internet connection will not necessarily give enough food, healthy water and a good education to everyone on earth 24/29 Very few solutions are developed in the South not that we would like to reinvent the wheel every time... There is need for a wider participation to the development of ICT because they control the way information produced is transmitted

The role of Free Software Encourage locally developed solutions More specific to the problem Provide for sustainability Local developers and experts can more easily transmit their knowledge Allows a diversification of the market Small companies can be competitive without huge investments 25/29

Access to Intellectual Work http://www.creativecommons.org Creative Commons is an organization for the development of alternatives to full copyright licenses We use private rights to create public goods Many licenses offered, contextualized in many countries A new licence was released in September The Developing Nations License allows you to invite a wide range of royalty-free uses of your work in developing nations while retaining your full copyright in the developed world 26/29

Conclusions At the beginning the questions were: What is the digital-divide? Is there a digital-divide out there? Is it growing? Now the focus is on: How can we use ICT for development? Is it time to move on to: How can we promote the development of ICT in developing countries? Which can be the role of the civil society to this regard? 27/29

References [1] UNDP Human Development Report 2001, Making New Technologies Work for Human Development, UNDP (2001); [2] P. Biggs, ICT development indices, UNCTAD (2003); [3] Bridges.org Spanning the Digital Divide. Understanding and Tackling the Issues, Bridges.org (2001); [4] S. Weerawarana, F. Weeratunge Open Source in Developing Countries, Swedish International Development Agency (2004) [5] P. Dravis Open Source Software. Perspectives for Development, infodev - the World Bank Group (2003) [6] McNamara, K.S Information and Communication Technologies, Poverty and Development: Learning from Experience, infodev Annual Symposium (2003) [7] E. Goldstein Internet in the Middle East and North Africa, Human Rights Watch (1999) [8] A. Haqqani (editor) The Role of Information and Communications Technologies in Global Development, UN ICT task force series 4 (2003) [9] Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries (EJISDC), City University of Hong Kong, Erasmus University of Rotterdam, University of Nebraska, Omaha (2004) 28/29

Thanks! This presentation http://palmerini.org/publ/talks/ict4d_fse.pdf More resources http://palmerini.org/ict4d 29/29

Thanks! This presentation http://palmerini.org/publ/talks/ict4d_fse.pdf More resources http://palmerini.org/ict4d 29/29 Questions...now!